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Aug 7, 2013
08/13
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posted earliere today, do you support the nsa surveillance programs? we have constitutional rights to privacy, liberty over security. the government is not to be trusted. it was all about relaxing rules , glad to see the right wing coming around. >> i would like to say eric snowden?t >> eric snowden. spy, we don't know and the government does not know what his intentions were. he may have thought this was his only alternative. if he wanted to do the right day and let the american public and i agree thatrams, the gentleman that said without him, we would not have had this debate. government already has charges for him? that is ridiculous. >> what do we know of his background, how he came to that position? it wasfense contractor, very early in his career, an analyst working in hawaii. allowed clearance level him to see this program and he gathered the data on it. and it led the the washington post. that was his decision, definitely. route, he his escape went overseas, and came up with -- teamed up with wikileaks, theed themselves with whistle-blower idea
posted earliere today, do you support the nsa surveillance programs? we have constitutional rights to privacy, liberty over security. the government is not to be trusted. it was all about relaxing rules , glad to see the right wing coming around. >> i would like to say eric snowden?t >> eric snowden. spy, we don't know and the government does not know what his intentions were. he may have thought this was his only alternative. if he wanted to do the right day and let the american...
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Aug 4, 2013
08/13
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can do a lote nsa of things that can be helpful to the united states. tooink they're gotten carried away by what is technologically feasible. what disciplinary steps were taken to allow a 29-year-old contract worker to come in and so everything they have and go to china and russia with it? if this happened in the major company like ibm or something, people would be fired. kinds of check so that would not happen. nsa will be --e has gotten too carried away with what is technologically possible and not what is best for the security of the united states. i say that having babe ruth on -- based on where they have been successful. >> why do you think these phone records to non-thwart attentional terrorist attacks? >> sometimes just having phone .ecords is not enough unless you have some idea of why you are gaining them. if wedy said yesterday had all this before 9/11 we would not have had 9/11. to go from a lot of the hijackers before 9/11. we had in assistant u.s. attorney trying to warn thatuarters in washington you have a problem with the strange people w
can do a lote nsa of things that can be helpful to the united states. tooink they're gotten carried away by what is technologically feasible. what disciplinary steps were taken to allow a 29-year-old contract worker to come in and so everything they have and go to china and russia with it? if this happened in the major company like ibm or something, people would be fired. kinds of check so that would not happen. nsa will be --e has gotten too carried away with what is technologically possible...
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Aug 11, 2013
08/13
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i somehow attribute it to the nsa. the nsa is not the irs. let's make that clear. i would not for a moment give these powers to the irs. the nsa is probably under more surveillance -- which is ironic any otherthan operation in our country today. it is watch on a regular basis i the fisa court. i do not think we need a fisa court. has thethe president power as commander-in-chief to carry out these operations. that is what president bush claimed in the early to thousands. that is what the court has said. the reality is we will have a fisa court. in any event, it is monitored on a regular basis. 30 day reports. six month reports. if when they are tracking -- last year, only 300 times were they had to drill down a numbers -- if they make a mistake and put the wrong digit , they have to do a full report on that. they have to purge everything they got. they have to file a report with that one explaining human error that was made. that is the type of scrutiny that it is under. my experience on the intelligence committee with the nsa was, what we heard over the last severa
i somehow attribute it to the nsa. the nsa is not the irs. let's make that clear. i would not for a moment give these powers to the irs. the nsa is probably under more surveillance -- which is ironic any otherthan operation in our country today. it is watch on a regular basis i the fisa court. i do not think we need a fisa court. has thethe president power as commander-in-chief to carry out these operations. that is what president bush claimed in the early to thousands. that is what the court...
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Aug 10, 2013
08/13
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i would director of nsa for six years. an essay is very famous for its offense is quite -- nsa is very famous for its offense in squad. going in stealing stuff. about a fifth of the agency is defense. it also has the responsibility of protecting government secrets in the united states. not every country in the world has organized its intelligence center that way, to put the offense and defense in the same organization. we have done it that way. i think we have done it well and correctly. we have done it that way because offense and defense rotated around the same concept. that concept is vulnerability. if you mastered the vulnerability you can play offense, if you master the vulnerability you can play defense. and the life of nsa -- let's go pre-cyber. in the life of nsa, you always had a trade-off between the two squads. when you discover a vulnerability, do you want to exploit it to play offense or do you want to fix it to play defense? back in the pre-cyber world we had a pretty well-worn road as to where the line is. i
i would director of nsa for six years. an essay is very famous for its offense is quite -- nsa is very famous for its offense in squad. going in stealing stuff. about a fifth of the agency is defense. it also has the responsibility of protecting government secrets in the united states. not every country in the world has organized its intelligence center that way, to put the offense and defense in the same organization. we have done it that way. i think we have done it well and correctly. we...
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Aug 10, 2013
08/13
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the nsa is putting in a privacy officer. and finally, the intelligence community is creating a website that will serve as a for further transparency. this will give americans and the world the ability to learn more about what our intelligence community does and what it doesn't do, how it carries out its mission and why it does so. fourth, we are forming a high- level group of outside experts to review our entire intelligence and communications technologies. we need new thinking for a new era. we now have two under -- we have to unravel terrorist plots by finding a needle in a haystack" -- of global communications. madewell, technology has given governments unprecedented capability to monitor situations.-- communications. so i'm asking this independent group to step back and review our capabilities, particularly our surveillance technologies and how we can maintain the trust of the people, how we can make sure that there is absolutely no abuse in terms of how these surveillance technologies are used, ask how surveillance impa
the nsa is putting in a privacy officer. and finally, the intelligence community is creating a website that will serve as a for further transparency. this will give americans and the world the ability to learn more about what our intelligence community does and what it doesn't do, how it carries out its mission and why it does so. fourth, we are forming a high- level group of outside experts to review our entire intelligence and communications technologies. we need new thinking for a new era....
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Aug 25, 2013
08/13
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>> hillary clinton is giving speechh on the nsa -- a on the nsa on september 10 that i think will be fascinating to watch. i do think this issue does have at least the potential now of dividingthat kind of line within the democratic party and potentially something that could in fact shape whatever primary race there is in 2016. >> interesting she will be taking on that issue right now. what do you make on that? >> i have to differ somewherat n that. it is hard to see this issue becoming a really cutting edge issue for a couple of reasons. the vast majority of americans do want surveillance to take place to prevent us against terrorists. they do want this balance. also, it is hard to see even if i know intellectually that the nsa might be knowing what phone calls or numbers go in and out of my phone and intercepting some of my e-mails and that sort of thing, it is hard for us to see how it impacts our lives. it is different from the economy and jobs and obamacare. it may be more of an intellectual exercise that does not really rise to the top of the political debates. >> we will watch
>> hillary clinton is giving speechh on the nsa -- a on the nsa on september 10 that i think will be fascinating to watch. i do think this issue does have at least the potential now of dividingthat kind of line within the democratic party and potentially something that could in fact shape whatever primary race there is in 2016. >> interesting she will be taking on that issue right now. what do you make on that? >> i have to differ somewherat n that. it is hard to see this...
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Aug 11, 2013
08/13
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let's talk about the nsa vote. toyou have additional stuff throw when we will give you the opportunity to do that. i look at this issue really carefully. number one, nobody likes the fact that in the government government agencies collecting massive amounts of data. they certainly have the ability to know who you have called. we have had federal judges look at this and say it is constitutional. , we know wedecide have stopped about 50 terrorist to ak from information lot. on theat who is intelligence committees. one of the guys on the intelligence committee is tom coburn. i was at the meeting with him. i watched and stand up and said this had the best oversight, the most accountable, and was saving american lives. 13 out of the 14 voted that way. both the speaker and the minority leader's book that way. look at the irs are exactly right. absolutely horrific abuse of power. cases havedividual come forward. two that have been the eater of this country in the last decade feel the same way. now, i said i think this is
let's talk about the nsa vote. toyou have additional stuff throw when we will give you the opportunity to do that. i look at this issue really carefully. number one, nobody likes the fact that in the government government agencies collecting massive amounts of data. they certainly have the ability to know who you have called. we have had federal judges look at this and say it is constitutional. , we know wedecide have stopped about 50 terrorist to ak from information lot. on theat who is...
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Aug 7, 2013
08/13
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and the life of nsa -- let's go pre-cyber. nsa, you always had a trade-off between the two squads. when you discover a vulnerability, do you want to exploit it to play offense or do you want to fix it to play defense? back in the pre-cyber world we had a pretty well-worn road as is.here the line i am willing to enter into a debate that that line might not be in the wrong place. that the old approach to it, the old calculation -- i want to keep that home ability because i want to use it in the future -- might actually be technically correct, operationally sound in a discrete one-off decision kind cumulative effect of the discreetly correct decisions has been a real strategic problem that industry vulnerabilities out there. i actually think the trend line and the more we can accelerate it, the better. it will go too far. you know how it works. and we will pick it back a little bit. but i think the trend line now is in the direction of more defense, even if it has to be at the expense of offense. the degree of what we need to do with the trendline is to accelerate it, because i think
and the life of nsa -- let's go pre-cyber. nsa, you always had a trade-off between the two squads. when you discover a vulnerability, do you want to exploit it to play offense or do you want to fix it to play defense? back in the pre-cyber world we had a pretty well-worn road as is.here the line i am willing to enter into a debate that that line might not be in the wrong place. that the old approach to it, the old calculation -- i want to keep that home ability because i want to use it in the...
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Aug 4, 2013
08/13
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cost -- nsa's surveillance program. i appreciate it is difficult to talk about classified programs in public settings. the american people expect and deserve honest answers. it has been thought to get -- to difficult to get answers about the program, but this program is a critical national security tool. some supporters of this program have repeatedly come to light about the efficacy of this complained about the efficacy of this section 215 . i don't think it is a coincidence when we have people make thatent comparison, but it needs to stop. the americanof people is beginning to wear thin. what has to be of more concern for the trustacy of the american people is wearing thin. i asked general alexander about the effectiveness of section 215 . at a hearing last month he agreed to provide a classified list of terrorist events that section 215 helped to prevent. i reviewed that list. it does not do the same for section 215. the list does not find the events that were hoped to prevent. these facts matter. the collection has
cost -- nsa's surveillance program. i appreciate it is difficult to talk about classified programs in public settings. the american people expect and deserve honest answers. it has been thought to get -- to difficult to get answers about the program, but this program is a critical national security tool. some supporters of this program have repeatedly come to light about the efficacy of this complained about the efficacy of this section 215 . i don't think it is a coincidence when we have...
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Aug 10, 2013
08/13
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and the life of nsa -- let's go pre-cyber. in the life of nsa, you always had a trade-off between the two squads. when you discover a vulnerability, do you want to exploit it to play offense or do you want to fix it to play defense? back in the pre-cyber world we had a pretty well-worn road as to where the line is. i am willing to enter into a debate that that line might not be in the wrong place. that the old approach to it, the old calculation -- i want to keep that vulnerability because i want to use it in the future might actually be technically correct, operationally sound in a discrete one-off decision kind of way but the cumulative effect of the discreetly correct decisions has been a real strategic problem that industry is unaware of of vulnerabilities out there. i actually think the trend line and the more we can accelerate it, the better. it will go too far. you know how it works. and we will pick it back a little bit. but i think the trend line now is in the direction of more defense, even if it has to be at the exp
and the life of nsa -- let's go pre-cyber. in the life of nsa, you always had a trade-off between the two squads. when you discover a vulnerability, do you want to exploit it to play offense or do you want to fix it to play defense? back in the pre-cyber world we had a pretty well-worn road as to where the line is. i am willing to enter into a debate that that line might not be in the wrong place. that the old approach to it, the old calculation -- i want to keep that vulnerability because i...
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Aug 20, 2013
08/13
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we get information from other agencies that they collect whether nsa, fbi. we are not collecting it. it is the lawfully connect the -- collected. it came after 2009 that we do not have access to some of the types of information that would help us like the underwear bomber. we had great access to threat information coming from the reports provided to us by cia, the nsa. what we do not have is the kind of access we needed to non-terrorism databases. information about individuals applying for refugee status in the united states or for visas. because what we need to do is have information and not just for a minute or a day or a week but long enough so we have the rate information from the cia, from a source, all we have is a name or a first name, what we do to compare the information to the other information we have also collected at the government has about people traveling care or seeking asylum so that we can then provided to the agencies that can act on it? it is my perspective that we were already doing it will be somewhat surprised i would have trouble doi
we get information from other agencies that they collect whether nsa, fbi. we are not collecting it. it is the lawfully connect the -- collected. it came after 2009 that we do not have access to some of the types of information that would help us like the underwear bomber. we had great access to threat information coming from the reports provided to us by cia, the nsa. what we do not have is the kind of access we needed to non-terrorism databases. information about individuals applying for...
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Aug 13, 2013
08/13
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so the nsa is taking it without my permission. google is taking it because that's my price for doing business with them. >> they had 134,000 e-mails, data about his 2,000-plus contacts, knew what he searched for and what he talked to on the telephone, et cetera. et cetera. what do you think of that? >> well, if it's me, i would say the fbi's file on me is probably larger. that's what i'd be most worried about. look, no. i tend to agree here. and this idea, john, of individuals saying you can't have this or that, i don't know how that works when the nsa obviously isn't that interested in me. but some terrorist is going to say, i'd prefer if you fellows didn't have my phone records and all the rest of it. but, you know, i'm beginning to think that the congress of the united states should rightly take a look at this and sort of limit and we should argue out exactly what they can hold and how long. >> well, they are looking at it. and the president, in his press conference on friday, basically said he wants to work with the congress o
so the nsa is taking it without my permission. google is taking it because that's my price for doing business with them. >> they had 134,000 e-mails, data about his 2,000-plus contacts, knew what he searched for and what he talked to on the telephone, et cetera. et cetera. what do you think of that? >> well, if it's me, i would say the fbi's file on me is probably larger. that's what i'd be most worried about. look, no. i tend to agree here. and this idea, john, of individuals...
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Aug 27, 2013
08/13
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i want to go back to the nsa program. you said something important, which is you could vouch for the program that was underway when you were in office. but obviously not being read into the into the program now, it is a different situation. i think everybody in this room would agree barack obama is no dick cheney.[applause] when you have a president who has shown himself to have such a complete disreguard for the rule of law, who has shown himself willing to use the irs to go after political enemies, who has shown himself willing to completely disregard the constitution, to decide i am not going to implement the employer mandate because it is inconvenient for me even though it is the law, who has shown himself frankly completely irresponsible when it comes to protecting americans' privacy, you have a lot of americans out there now, and in light of a lot of news stories we are seeing, that say the nsa made a mistake and they listened to phone calls from washington, d.c., because it has a 202 area code which is similar to t
i want to go back to the nsa program. you said something important, which is you could vouch for the program that was underway when you were in office. but obviously not being read into the into the program now, it is a different situation. i think everybody in this room would agree barack obama is no dick cheney.[applause] when you have a president who has shown himself to have such a complete disreguard for the rule of law, who has shown himself willing to use the irs to go after political...
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Aug 11, 2013
08/13
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gecko what i'm talking about is -- the nsa? what i'm talking about is the dy made, taking it out of the nsa possession, allowing it to remain in five years in a phone company's possession. you're taking it out of and putting it into the civil courts, where the phone company is a subject to an injunction. >> general alexander and others in the nsa have discussed this. they have no philosophical problem with the phone company holding onto the records. again, their concern is what they have that absolutely immediate access that they need? the issue you raises another question come in regards to a civil court, someone getting an injunction, whatever, delaying it, and once the nsa says they have that instantaneous access, they said they are written -- willing to work. with the absolute assurance of that would have instantaneous access but i do not know if that can be done. won a turf, they just want to know they have instant access. >> just to correct the record, i did not endorse a proposal. it was another panelist. i have not made
gecko what i'm talking about is -- the nsa? what i'm talking about is the dy made, taking it out of the nsa possession, allowing it to remain in five years in a phone company's possession. you're taking it out of and putting it into the civil courts, where the phone company is a subject to an injunction. >> general alexander and others in the nsa have discussed this. they have no philosophical problem with the phone company holding onto the records. again, their concern is what they have...
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Aug 25, 2013
08/13
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i distrust the nsa. if you go back and read a story in our newspaper in 2008, what we have learned is entirely consistent with that, if you describe the scope of the way this operation working normally. that and the snowden details have put more detail to it. in specific, the revelations about the court admonishing the nsa suggests there is a mechanism for dealing with error, at least, and potentially with abuse. >> and the administration released the court rulings, declassified them themselves, this is not a leak, so it got the information out there and it does show that there is a process by which mistakes overreaching is corrected. >> yeah, it was human operator error, it was not intentional evil grabbing e-mails and reading them. they worked with that judge, if you read down to the bottom of the statement and they corrected the problem to the satisfaction of the court and the court said problem solved. >> is your problem, james, that it's this president or is it the programs themselves? and i want to
i distrust the nsa. if you go back and read a story in our newspaper in 2008, what we have learned is entirely consistent with that, if you describe the scope of the way this operation working normally. that and the snowden details have put more detail to it. in specific, the revelations about the court admonishing the nsa suggests there is a mechanism for dealing with error, at least, and potentially with abuse. >> and the administration released the court rulings, declassified them...
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Aug 1, 2013
08/13
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we will talk about nsa leaker sndwden and we'll talk about a new documentary on president nixon. host: we think today is the way for the united states senate, not just for the week but for the month of august. we expect the house to follow suit tomorrow after one more vote on health care. summer break is upon us here in washington, d.c. one headline says lawmakers are leaving capitol hill pretty empty-handed. both sides are pointing fingers at each other. want to get your thoughts this thursday
we will talk about nsa leaker sndwden and we'll talk about a new documentary on president nixon. host: we think today is the way for the united states senate, not just for the week but for the month of august. we expect the house to follow suit tomorrow after one more vote on health care. summer break is upon us here in washington, d.c. one headline says lawmakers are leaving capitol hill pretty empty-handed. both sides are pointing fingers at each other. want to get your thoughts this thursday
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Aug 22, 2013
08/13
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. >> moving on to the nsa. it has been roughly 2.5 months since the edward snowden leaks were exposed to the world and the mass surveillance operations unveiled. to this day, the nsa still is not sure of the extent of these leaks. unnamed sources within the intelligence committee told nbc news that the nsa is overwhelmed trying to figure out what edward snowden took. keith alexander was asked in july about just how much the agency knows regarding the extent of the leaks. >> let me ask you about edward snowden. you cannot tell us what he got but do you feel now that you know what he got? >> yes. >> this latest report contradicts that claim. alexander answered the question in a more general sense, a spokesman said. more news is breaking about the scope of the nsa's surveillance of the internet, particularly u.s. networks. more unnamed government and in taligent's officials -- intelligence officials said the u.s. has the ability to monitor 75% of the domestic internet traffic here. it does this through a series of
. >> moving on to the nsa. it has been roughly 2.5 months since the edward snowden leaks were exposed to the world and the mass surveillance operations unveiled. to this day, the nsa still is not sure of the extent of these leaks. unnamed sources within the intelligence committee told nbc news that the nsa is overwhelmed trying to figure out what edward snowden took. keith alexander was asked in july about just how much the agency knows regarding the extent of the leaks. >> let me...
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Aug 6, 2013
08/13
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let's start with the nsa. how widespread does the revelation show their surveillance programs are of u.s. citizens? >> i think it was a shock to everyone about what we learned from snowden's revelation. the nsa is collecting information on potentially every american. it is from telephone metadata. that is pretty much every call you have made. they store that data for five years. >> what happens to it after that? >> well, we do not really know. they say they can only store it for five years, so in theory, it has to be destroyed after that. another program we are learning about collected e-mail metadata. so they are doing e-mail, too. they say that ended in 2011. >> walk us through the metadata. what exactly is that? why is it important in this data collection program? >> when you are investigating terrorism, what you are looking for is not just individual people, but networks. if you found one person, you're interested and who else is working with them? you want to look at who they communicate with. this inform
let's start with the nsa. how widespread does the revelation show their surveillance programs are of u.s. citizens? >> i think it was a shock to everyone about what we learned from snowden's revelation. the nsa is collecting information on potentially every american. it is from telephone metadata. that is pretty much every call you have made. they store that data for five years. >> what happens to it after that? >> well, we do not really know. they say they can only store it...
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Aug 22, 2013
08/13
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nsa admits new privacy violations. kevin johnson writing about the top intelligence officials here yen . there are other accounts of the story as well. theheard some thoughts on 35-year sentence handed down. you could make your thoughts known as well. kentucky up next. archie on the independent line. good morning. personally i think they both deserve a government of freedom. this government serves it's self and huge multinational corporations. that is all it serves. they have no interest in what we want and our rights as a citizen. privacy as out the window. this is 1984. thank you very much. host: a presidential pardon is the goal of a new web site. this is for bradley manning. in conjunction with the announcement, the support network has launched the website that connects to a petition written by amnesty international and a video with testimony from veterans and civilians from afghanistan. it will link to the official application for pardon as soon as it is available. a couple of thoughts this morning on pardon. rand
nsa admits new privacy violations. kevin johnson writing about the top intelligence officials here yen . there are other accounts of the story as well. theheard some thoughts on 35-year sentence handed down. you could make your thoughts known as well. kentucky up next. archie on the independent line. good morning. personally i think they both deserve a government of freedom. this government serves it's self and huge multinational corporations. that is all it serves. they have no interest in...
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Aug 23, 2013
08/13
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government released documents showing a past secret court ruling on nsa surveillance. they chastise the nsa for illegally collecting tens of thousands of e-mails. the unmasking ahead. the army whistleblower manning sentenced to 35 years in prison for leaking documents but the story does not end there. we will look at the extreme conditions placed on the media as we covered the trial. in san francisco, officials are considering a class-action lawsuit against nevada, laming it gave hundreds of psychiatric patients at one-way ticket to california. it is thursday, august 22. 5 p.m. in washington dc. while the obama administration is trying to beat its critics to the punch in the wake of the nsa surveillance scandal, they are coming clean, in a way, anyway. and the ruling that came out in 2011 after the electronic frontier foundation filed a request pretty recently. the court lambasted the nsa for illegally collecting as many as 56,000 e-mails from innocent people each year over three years. then the nsa proceeded to misrepresent the size and scope of that collection. john
government released documents showing a past secret court ruling on nsa surveillance. they chastise the nsa for illegally collecting tens of thousands of e-mails. the unmasking ahead. the army whistleblower manning sentenced to 35 years in prison for leaking documents but the story does not end there. we will look at the extreme conditions placed on the media as we covered the trial. in san francisco, officials are considering a class-action lawsuit against nevada, laming it gave hundreds of...
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Aug 12, 2013
08/13
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the investigation of the '70s after watergate and the revelation came out about the cia, fbi, irs, nsa a couple of initials have come up. there are real conspiracy. but when i'm also trying to do in the book is to look at conspiracy theories that say absolutely nothing true about the object of the series but all sort of thing that are true about the anxiety and the experience of the people who accept and believe and pass on the theory. the story doesn't catch on unless people feel a reason to believe it. >> what is a contemporary example. >> i think all sort of theories involve, you know, flooding again american liberty and sovereignty are going naturally appeal to people who feel like they're losing control over their live. all sort of new world order theory, for example, are metaphoric way of speaking about the losses controlled to people even the loss control is not being directed by 13 people in a secret room somewhere. this tbrun couple of decades ago. the idea that why doctors were injecting black -- there's no truth to that. ther responsible to say it was true. but it was able t
the investigation of the '70s after watergate and the revelation came out about the cia, fbi, irs, nsa a couple of initials have come up. there are real conspiracy. but when i'm also trying to do in the book is to look at conspiracy theories that say absolutely nothing true about the object of the series but all sort of thing that are true about the anxiety and the experience of the people who accept and believe and pass on the theory. the story doesn't catch on unless people feel a reason to...
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Aug 24, 2013
08/13
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neil: coming up, by dennis says the nsa is a menace. and then look out, espn. neil: dennis has had enough of big government. but when it comes to the nsa, actually, yes, the former candidate has heard more than enough about the agency's surveillance abuses of the cost and overreach. so he wants to reach for the stop button. how about the agency altogether? >> if you look at the declaration is clearly violating the constitution and the laws of the land. neil: you sound like a libertarian kind of. >> i am. i believe in liberty and freedom. we cannot let big government and corporations to become familiar with the deeper principles of our costitution. neil: us what you think about domestic surveillance? >> well, one that's agency, the nsa, has unashamedly lied repeatedly, they have lied to congress and the agency has to go. there are ponies of importance here. if you violate the americans rights to privacy, you turn somebody into something that you are out of here. neil: you don't buy the notion that this is being done? >> we have to be protected from an essay now.
neil: coming up, by dennis says the nsa is a menace. and then look out, espn. neil: dennis has had enough of big government. but when it comes to the nsa, actually, yes, the former candidate has heard more than enough about the agency's surveillance abuses of the cost and overreach. so he wants to reach for the stop button. how about the agency altogether? >> if you look at the declaration is clearly violating the constitution and the laws of the land. neil: you sound like a libertarian...
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you don't have to throw nsa out. democracy, you don't throw it out if you find fraud. >> david: last word from steve. as we celebrate the har-working americans that make america great. the "cashin' in" gang looking in to whether the hand-outs destroy our wonderful work ethic. that's at the bottom of the hour. right here on forbes, college grades are meaningless? find out what more employers are relying on instead when it comes to new hires and why it's firing up a major fight. so then the little tiny chipmunks go all the way up... ♪ [ female announcer ] when your swapportunity comes, take it. ♪ what? what? what? [ female announcer ] yoplait. it is so good. folks have suffered from frequent heartburn. butetting heartburn and then treating day after day is a thing of the past. block the acid with prilosec otc, and don't get heartburn in the first place. [ male announcer ] one pill each morning 24 hours. zero heartburn. >> david: employers who don't trust the college gpa judge graduates on a skills-based test. is it
you don't have to throw nsa out. democracy, you don't throw it out if you find fraud. >> david: last word from steve. as we celebrate the har-working americans that make america great. the "cashin' in" gang looking in to whether the hand-outs destroy our wonderful work ethic. that's at the bottom of the hour. right here on forbes, college grades are meaningless? find out what more employers are relying on instead when it comes to new hires and why it's firing up a major fight....
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new allegations rock the nsa. documents leeng s beaked leakedd thousands of violations. >> what you are not reading about is the government actually abusing these programs. >> we'll discuss with the key member of the homeland security committee and critic of the nda, kentucky senator, rand paul. >>> crack down on supporters of leader leaves hundreds of people dead. >> we'll discuss the situation in the region and the us response with republican congressman of new york and senator rumenthal of connecticut. >>> the obama is forced to play defense. >> this is no longer a political debate. this is what we call the law. >> the president claims that this law is working the way it is supposed to. but clearly it is not. >> we'll ask our sunday panel about the political hall out. all right here on fox news sunday. >> more tough questions for the nsa after the washington post reported this week that the agency violated policy rules. >> nation's most secretive spy agency intercepted e-mails and calls during that time and did
new allegations rock the nsa. documents leeng s beaked leakedd thousands of violations. >> what you are not reading about is the government actually abusing these programs. >> we'll discuss with the key member of the homeland security committee and critic of the nda, kentucky senator, rand paul. >>> crack down on supporters of leader leaves hundreds of people dead. >> we'll discuss the situation in the region and the us response with republican congressman of new york...
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nsa. >> documents leaked by former nsa contractor edward snowden detail thousands of privacy violations after repeated denials from the white house. >> what you are not reading rea about is the government gov actually abusing these programs. >> we'll discuss with a key member of the homeland security committee and critic of the nsa kentucky senator rand paul. >> and then another week of chaos in egypt as the interim government's crackdown on supporters of mohamed morsi leaves hundreds of people dead.. >> our pro decisional cooperation cannot continue as usual when civilians are being killed in the streets. >> we will discuss the deteriorating situation in the region and the u.s. response with republican congressman pete king from new york and richard bloom -- bloom nee -- bloomenthal. >> and forcing the obama administration to play defense. >> this is no longer aat w political debate. this is what we call the law. >> the president claims that this law is working the way it is supposed to. but clearly it is not. >> we will ask our sundayn: w panel about the political fallout all right he
nsa. >> documents leaked by former nsa contractor edward snowden detail thousands of privacy violations after repeated denials from the white house. >> what you are not reading rea about is the government gov actually abusing these programs. >> we'll discuss with a key member of the homeland security committee and critic of the nsa kentucky senator rand paul. >> and then another week of chaos in egypt as the interim government's crackdown on supporters of mohamed morsi...
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let's start with the nsa. how widespread does the revelation show their surveillance programs are of u.s. citizens? >> i think it was a shock to everyone about what we learned from snowden's revelation. the nsa is collecting information on potentially every american. it is from telephone metadata. that is pretty much every call you have made. they store that data for five years. >> what happens to it after that? >> well, we do not really know. they say they can only store it for five years, so in theory, it has to be destroyed after that. another program we are learning about collected e-mail metadata. so they are doing e-mail, too. they say that ended in 2011. >> walk us through the metadata. what exactly is that? why is it important in this data collection program? >> when you are investigating terrorism, what you are looking for is not just individual people, but networks. if you found one person, you're interested and who else is working with them? you want to look at who they communicate with. this inform
let's start with the nsa. how widespread does the revelation show their surveillance programs are of u.s. citizens? >> i think it was a shock to everyone about what we learned from snowden's revelation. the nsa is collecting information on potentially every american. it is from telephone metadata. that is pretty much every call you have made. they store that data for five years. >> what happens to it after that? >> well, we do not really know. they say they can only store it...
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neil: coming up, by dennis says the nsa is a menace. the nsa is a menace. and then look out, espn. this man is about to be the millionth customer. the nsa is a menace. and then look out, espn. would you mind if i go ahead of you? instead we had someone go ahead of him and win fiy thousand dollars. congratulations you are our one millionth customer. nobody likes to miss out. that's why ally treats all their customers the same. whether you're the first or the millionth. if your bank doesn't think you're special anymore, you need an ally. ally bank. your money needs aally. neil: dennis has had enough of big government. yes, the formers to the nsa, candidate has heard more than enough about the agency's surveillance abuses of the cost and overreach. so he wants to reach for the stop button. how about the agency altogether? >> if you look at the declaration is clearly violating the constitution and the laws of the land. neil: you sound like a libertarian kind of. >> i am. i believe in liberty and freedom. we cannot let big government and corporations to become familiar with the deeper p
neil: coming up, by dennis says the nsa is a menace. the nsa is a menace. and then look out, espn. this man is about to be the millionth customer. the nsa is a menace. and then look out, espn. would you mind if i go ahead of you? instead we had someone go ahead of him and win fiy thousand dollars. congratulations you are our one millionth customer. nobody likes to miss out. that's why ally treats all their customers the same. whether you're the first or the millionth. if your bank doesn't think...
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Aug 16, 2013
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tonight there's breaking news about the nsa. "the washington post" just reporting the nsa has broken privacy rules or overstepped legal authority thousands of times each year since 2008. according to an internal audit, most of the violations are of americans or foreign intelligence officials in the united states. and the "washington post" also reporting that the chief judge of the secret court that's supposed to provide oversight of the government's spying program says the court's ability to do so is limited. john sununu joins us. good evening, sir. >> good evening. >> with the news breaking, certainly an expansion of what we have been hearing about the nsa in terms of swpying. your thoughts? >> two things. a lot of what happens in an agency, even the nsa, is a reflection of the culture they see from the top. you have a. president and administration that levels in going beyond the box f you will, that they are limited to by law. i think that seeped all the way down into the nsa. even though the audit says i think it's in the las
tonight there's breaking news about the nsa. "the washington post" just reporting the nsa has broken privacy rules or overstepped legal authority thousands of times each year since 2008. according to an internal audit, most of the violations are of americans or foreign intelligence officials in the united states. and the "washington post" also reporting that the chief judge of the secret court that's supposed to provide oversight of the government's spying program says the...
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Aug 24, 2013
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neil: coming up, by dennis says the nsa is a menace. the nsa is a menace. and then look out, espn. this man is about to be the millionth customer. the nsa is a menace. and then look out, espn. would you mind if i go ahead of you? instead we had someone go ahead of him and win fiy thousand dollars. congratulations you are our one millionth customer. nobody likes to miss out. that's why ally treats all their customers the same. whether you're the first or the millionth. if your bank doesn't think you're special anymore, you need an ally. ally bank. your money needs an al. ask me what it's like to get your best night's sleep every night. [announcer] why not lk to someone who's sleeping on the most highly recommended bed in america? ask me about my tempur-pedic. ask me how fast i fall asleep. ask me about staying asleep. [announcer] tempur-pedic owners are more satisfied than owners of any traditional mattress brand. tempur-pedic. the most highly recommended bed in america. buy a tempur-pedic mattress set and get a free twin tempur-simplicity mattress. find a store near you at tempurpe
neil: coming up, by dennis says the nsa is a menace. the nsa is a menace. and then look out, espn. this man is about to be the millionth customer. the nsa is a menace. and then look out, espn. would you mind if i go ahead of you? instead we had someone go ahead of him and win fiy thousand dollars. congratulations you are our one millionth customer. nobody likes to miss out. that's why ally treats all their customers the same. whether you're the first or the millionth. if your bank doesn't think...
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Aug 24, 2013
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there are laws and rules preventing the nsa from doing the awful things. there's no evidence that they have done it. will's never been a single identifiable example of a person who was e-mailing -- e-mail read or damaged by the nsa. >> do you buy that analogy of a police? give them guns and you can abuse guns but where they donor if they do they are punished to -- capacity, nsa, to listen in on 75% of our online communications. >> i don't buy that argument. this is about collecting information. we have a government that has repeatedly undermined our rust in washington. her saying don't worry, we have this covered. it is very hard for -- to put the american people in position where they have to choose whether they will trust the government or if they don't, they are going to be accused of, you know, not helping on the war on terror. >> the 75% figure is a capacity figure and what they are capable of doing. we knew they had that, something like that capacity. weigh don't listen to that. we have access, really, to about 1m 1.6% of these communications and sma
there are laws and rules preventing the nsa from doing the awful things. there's no evidence that they have done it. will's never been a single identifiable example of a person who was e-mailing -- e-mail read or damaged by the nsa. >> do you buy that analogy of a police? give them guns and you can abuse guns but where they donor if they do they are punished to -- capacity, nsa, to listen in on 75% of our online communications. >> i don't buy that argument. this is about collecting...
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Aug 25, 2013
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just one more item on the nsa, the nsa whenve they say they picked up american conversations because they misdialed 20 instead of the , 202.an -- egyptian code compared to that, bradley manning looks like a genius. >> we have to have a set of rules we can all agree on. i don't think it is going to be that hard to decide. >> obamacare. >> the problem is, a bill that would shut down the government would not shut down obamacare. most of it is permanent law. >> that is senate minority leader, mitch mcconnell. ted cruz visited iowa twice this summer. rand paul three times. is ted cruz a headache for the republicans? thehey go there for corndogs. you cannot find them in the hamptons, even if you look. >> is he a headache? >> he is a symbol of the split between the establishment and the tea party rebels. he is a problem. he discovered that he might be canadian, which does not look good if you're trying to be the president of another country. care of that.g i think he is brilliant at public relations, as is rand paul. senateonly been in the for a few months. he is sort of the barack obama of
just one more item on the nsa, the nsa whenve they say they picked up american conversations because they misdialed 20 instead of the , 202.an -- egyptian code compared to that, bradley manning looks like a genius. >> we have to have a set of rules we can all agree on. i don't think it is going to be that hard to decide. >> obamacare. >> the problem is, a bill that would shut down the government would not shut down obamacare. most of it is permanent law. >> that is...
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Aug 16, 2013
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the latest nsa leak is a bombshell. we're now learning the government's broken the rules on spying again and again. thousands of times per year. but officials have at the national security agency say, mistakes happen. don't worry about it. another bloody and deadly day in egypt. we'll show you how the gunfire got so intense it forced people to jump off a bridge. and lou should the white house handle this mess now? plus, listen to this. a new study is out that shows lap computers actually hurt kids' grades in school. it finds that students who use pencil and paper get higher marks. the reason for that, unless breaking news changes everything on "studio b." >> first, from fox, at 3:00 in new york city, the deadly day oflag -- of rage in egypt. dramatic video which appears to show people jumping off the bridge i mentioned in cairo to escape the gunfire. look at this. >> shepard: this is amateur video. seems to speak for itself. dozens more people reported dead today on top of the hundreds killed and thousands hurt earlier
the latest nsa leak is a bombshell. we're now learning the government's broken the rules on spying again and again. thousands of times per year. but officials have at the national security agency say, mistakes happen. don't worry about it. another bloody and deadly day in egypt. we'll show you how the gunfire got so intense it forced people to jump off a bridge. and lou should the white house handle this mess now? plus, listen to this. a new study is out that shows lap computers actually hurt...
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Aug 24, 2013
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obama trying to convince us that nsa's spying the for our own good. as more details surface about the excessive effort should we be concerned? are the media concerned? >> conflictses in the middle east continue to heat up. chemical attacks in syria. killing more than a
obama trying to convince us that nsa's spying the for our own good. as more details surface about the excessive effort should we be concerned? are the media concerned? >> conflictses in the middle east continue to heat up. chemical attacks in syria. killing more than a
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plus, the new nsa documents. they are -- their spy something worse than we ever knew they have read our emails and listened to our phone calls thousands of times a year. simple mistakes or a pattern of abuse. tonight, the latest leak about the nsa. and, a paralimp i don't paraolympian denied a chance because she could walk again some day. >> i didn't expect this at all. it's pretty shocking. >> they landed her a loss tonight before she could even get in the game. still, this teenager isn't finished with her fight. plus, it's been cloaked in mystery since its creation. >> welcome to area 51. >> now the cia decleafs documents that show what really went on at area 51. why are some sections still a secret? and that is first from fox this friday night. no little green men. no flying saucers. but after decades of denying that area 51 exists now an admission. the documents prove it is very real. but the conspiracy theories are going nowhere. not by a long shot. area 51 is the then secret base in the middle of the nevada
plus, the new nsa documents. they are -- their spy something worse than we ever knew they have read our emails and listened to our phone calls thousands of times a year. simple mistakes or a pattern of abuse. tonight, the latest leak about the nsa. and, a paralimp i don't paraolympian denied a chance because she could walk again some day. >> i didn't expect this at all. it's pretty shocking. >> they landed her a loss tonight before she could even get in the game. still, this...
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even though the nsa insists that this is far from arbitrary. quoting, activities are focused specifically deployed against and only against legitimate foreign intelligence targets the respond to requirements that leaders need for information necessary to protect our nation and its interest. exactly whose interest? and whose discretion? because it is arbitrary and very scary. i don't know what troubles me more, the fact the nsa does not deny the existence of a program or the obvious potential abuses. what is most troubling is the nsa has actually been doing more of the stuff since the campaign came to light just a couple of months ago. even through the controversy and the hearing, more of this crap and government sponsored hacking on us and all under the guise of protecting us. enough. now you're scariness. center marco rubioo but he makes of this controversial program and the fact that it is widening. he says it is a tough balance, that's for sure. >> osama bin lawn was calling someone in the united states, you would want to know that because i
even though the nsa insists that this is far from arbitrary. quoting, activities are focused specifically deployed against and only against legitimate foreign intelligence targets the respond to requirements that leaders need for information necessary to protect our nation and its interest. exactly whose interest? and whose discretion? because it is arbitrary and very scary. i don't know what troubles me more, the fact the nsa does not deny the existence of a program or the obvious potential...
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we found out about azazi through a nsa 702 coverage. he was talking to an al qaeda courier and asking for his help to perfect explosives recipe. for that we would not have known about the plot. we followed that up with legal process and had fisa coverage on him and others as we fully investigated the plot. 215 was also involved as a previously mentioned where we also, through legal process, were submitting legal process for telephone numbers and other e-mail addresses and other selectors but nsa also provided another number we are unaware of as a co-conspirator. that is an instance where a serious plot to attack america on u.s. soil that we used both these programs. what i say as the chairman mentioned, there is a difference in the utility of the programs. what i say to you is that each and every programming tool is valuable. what we have collectively try to do, the members of the committee, other members of the other oversight committees, the executive branch, and the intelligence community, is we have tried to close those gaps and clo
we found out about azazi through a nsa 702 coverage. he was talking to an al qaeda courier and asking for his help to perfect explosives recipe. for that we would not have known about the plot. we followed that up with legal process and had fisa coverage on him and others as we fully investigated the plot. 215 was also involved as a previously mentioned where we also, through legal process, were submitting legal process for telephone numbers and other e-mail addresses and other selectors but...
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the nsa are a type of police. they wanted the judiciary. an independent, open judiciary response toive to the people wi open debate in public. i think the constitutionalty of these programs need to be questioned and there needs to be a supreme court decision that looks at whether or not what they're doing is constitutional or not. >> joining us now is john roberts, who's filling in for chris wallace this morning. good morning, john. >> one of the problems senator rand paul sees is that why the intelligence surveillance court is the one that gives the nsa these blanket warrants they also do not have the power to initiate an independent investigation into compliance. he thinks that's something that needs to be looked at as well. it's pretty clear, eric, when congress comes back here to capitol hill in a couple of weeks it's going to be a big topic of discussion. i would expect, too, the subject of congressional hearings. another guest on the program today, congressman peter king of new york, doesn't see what all the fuss is about. he says whe
the nsa are a type of police. they wanted the judiciary. an independent, open judiciary response toive to the people wi open debate in public. i think the constitutionalty of these programs need to be questioned and there needs to be a supreme court decision that looks at whether or not what they're doing is constitutional or not. >> joining us now is john roberts, who's filling in for chris wallace this morning. good morning, john. >> one of the problems senator rand paul sees is...
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whethenow to an ongoing issue oe nsa. it has been the subject of controversy since the lakes of edward snowden which demonstrated the agency was spying on american citizens and breaking court order drills to do so. in a new interview, president obama said this over -- about the oversight of the nsa. >> what was learned was nsa had in it ridley, -- inadvertently pulled the files of americans in violation of their own rules. they presented those problems to the court. the court said, this is not going to cut it. you will improve the safeguards and this is what happened. >> note how president obama the rule violations were accidental. this account ridley contradicts a statement the nsa has made. it said, " rare instances of violations of authority have been found" so not all of these violations were accidental. the president was right when he said fisa courts demanded it makes changes to its surveillance program. "the guardian" has a story about efforts to wring nsa into compliance with court orders. using new leaks from edw
whethenow to an ongoing issue oe nsa. it has been the subject of controversy since the lakes of edward snowden which demonstrated the agency was spying on american citizens and breaking court order drills to do so. in a new interview, president obama said this over -- about the oversight of the nsa. >> what was learned was nsa had in it ridley, -- inadvertently pulled the files of americans in violation of their own rules. they presented those problems to the court. the court said, this...
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Aug 27, 2013
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and the nsa. because you were speaking a little earlier how the nsa isn't the obble one with all -- only one with these data. >> in the interview with director mueller of the f.b.i. in march of 2011, for time magazine, it was published, he talked about the f.b.i. using stellar wind from october, basically, of 2001. so the f.b.i. has been using that data base all along, and also in march of 2011 also, he testified to the senate judiciary committee where he was saying that he could go in to the data base that he set up with the department of defense where he could go in and with one query get past all past and all future e-mails. so that says there are content being stored on people inside the united states because his response was how would you prevent a future fort hood? that meant someone become radicalized and having a terrorist act or completing a terrorist act inside this country. that means he's got access to their e-mail. so that's getting back to this massive collection that mark kline o
and the nsa. because you were speaking a little earlier how the nsa isn't the obble one with all -- only one with these data. >> in the interview with director mueller of the f.b.i. in march of 2011, for time magazine, it was published, he talked about the f.b.i. using stellar wind from october, basically, of 2001. so the f.b.i. has been using that data base all along, and also in march of 2011 also, he testified to the senate judiciary committee where he was saying that he could go in...
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do we pull funding for nsa or too important to keep in place? >> what is iportant, eric, is win the war. poll tis on both sides of the aisle resigned that we will always be in conflict against islam. by naming the enmy and taking steps to defeat them, we don't worry about them hurting bus the government violating. >> eric: you say defund it, wayne? >> i say defund it. i say do fig. but the first thing is you have to do it legally. to say that the supreme court who opponents, hail to the supreme court, appoints the other court, you have to stop this, this is a violation of the fourth amendment. this is a constitutional issue. they are paying no attention to it. >> eric: coming up, i plause from ashton. not from hollywood. but conservatives. why his speech is getting big thumbs up. >> i'm not familiar with ashton kutcher politics but all i know is what he saidis right on. all i know is what he said is exactly what young people in this >> eric: talk about a hollywood plot twist. conservatives like rush, sarah, and ted cruz praising ashton kutcher t
do we pull funding for nsa or too important to keep in place? >> what is iportant, eric, is win the war. poll tis on both sides of the aisle resigned that we will always be in conflict against islam. by naming the enmy and taking steps to defeat them, we don't worry about them hurting bus the government violating. >> eric: you say defund it, wayne? >> i say defund it. i say do fig. but the first thing is you have to do it legally. to say that the supreme court who opponents,...
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, not to leak what nsa is doing. it takes a lot more time for truth on get out to explain it. lou: you can find one idiot in this country, judy, who did not assume or expect the nsa to be sueilling communications between people in this country, and foreign citizens who might, who might,ean this country harm? >> i think thateople assumed that was going on. lou: did you for example? >> i assumed that some of it was going on. lou: right. >> i didn't assume that drug enforcement agent might be able to ask nsa for access to data collected and stored. >> how about with the internal revenue service. >> or the irs, or any of half dozen other agencies that -- >> why is there this focus on nsa? and some of the most, i think, silly characters in washington, running aund beating their choaft about very havches about. it is absurd to wash them being taken seriously by the left-wing press, why is that energy exerted rather than saying, you know where is the threat? what are w doing about it? why isn't the commander in chief speaki
, not to leak what nsa is doing. it takes a lot more time for truth on get out to explain it. lou: you can find one idiot in this country, judy, who did not assume or expect the nsa to be sueilling communications between people in this country, and foreign citizens who might, who might,ean this country harm? >> i think thateople assumed that was going on. lou: did you for example? >> i assumed that some of it was going on. lou: right. >> i didn't assume that drug enforcement...
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. >>> this, after a new bombshell from the nsa. kelly o'donnell explains. . this is a recurring -- >> the brief new look inside the secrets of the nsa. the director of national intelligence released several documents to show an oversight of the spy program that sweeps up americans phone record data and the government is acknowledged using a wider net than previously known in what is called hop analysis the nsa traces a call made by a terror suspect but can track the records linked to anyone the suspect calls and on to anyone each of those callers contact, and so on. senator dick durbin was clearly uneasy. >> when you look at the reach of this program and it envelopes a substantial number of americans. >> reporter: frustration between senators and the intelligence community starting with how nas leaker edward snowden was ever granted access to the country's most guarded spy programs. senator patrick leahy dismayed no heads are rolled at the nsa. >> a 29-year-old school dropout can come in and take out massive, massive amounts of data. it's obvious there weren'
. >>> this, after a new bombshell from the nsa. kelly o'donnell explains. . this is a recurring -- >> the brief new look inside the secrets of the nsa. the director of national intelligence released several documents to show an oversight of the spy program that sweeps up americans phone record data and the government is acknowledged using a wider net than previously known in what is called hop analysis the nsa traces a call made by a terror suspect but can track the records...
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Aug 12, 2013
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my experience with the nsa was, what we heard mainly over the last several years, before any the nsa hade, information about people attacking dick cheney and others, waterboarding. the only time it came up as a debate in the intelligence committee was people from the nsa saying how tough it was to work with the fisa court, to get court orders, to follow up on the information we were getting. stamp, it isrubber- highly scrutinized. i realize the american people will say, do not worry, congress is looking out for you, that is not the greatest overconfidence. theeve me, people on intelligence committee take it seriously. mike rogers is extremely conscientious about that. this stuff is looked at very carefully. i do not see any significant violation of civil liberties, no significant -- like in 2009, it like one of those forest gump moments and you become a witness to history. i was the mayor bloomberg's home when he was entertaining the lord mayor of london. rupert murdoch was there, other powerful people, even tina brown like one of, to show you l it was. ray kelly was there as well. w
my experience with the nsa was, what we heard mainly over the last several years, before any the nsa hade, information about people attacking dick cheney and others, waterboarding. the only time it came up as a debate in the intelligence committee was people from the nsa saying how tough it was to work with the fisa court, to get court orders, to follow up on the information we were getting. stamp, it isrubber- highly scrutinized. i realize the american people will say, do not worry, congress...
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Aug 16, 2013
08/13
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the response of the nsa? >> it is truly shocking they are violating the surveillance laws thousands of times every year, effectively about seven times a day. in part because these laws are permissive. these aren't laws that impose meaningful restrictions. they essentially allow the nsa to collect vast amounts of information inside the united states and as we communicate internationally. the fact there are violating these very permissive laws is truly shocking. really disclosures undermine the intelligence community's primary defense of these programs, which is that there heavily regulated and overseeing. we know that is simply not true. congress is not been able to effectively oversee the nsa. now that we know the fisa court, the nsa is not able to -- in its own words, doesn't think it has the capacity to effectively oversee the nsa. the government has been claiming for years this is a regulated surveillance complex and in fact the fox has been guarding the hen house for far too long and it needs to stop. ,>
the response of the nsa? >> it is truly shocking they are violating the surveillance laws thousands of times every year, effectively about seven times a day. in part because these laws are permissive. these aren't laws that impose meaningful restrictions. they essentially allow the nsa to collect vast amounts of information inside the united states and as we communicate internationally. the fact there are violating these very permissive laws is truly shocking. really disclosures undermine...
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Aug 22, 2013
08/13
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. >>> the nsa is under fire yet again. newly released government documents show the secretive court that oversees surveillance programs sharply rebuked the nsa back in 2011. the charge? the nsa was searching the kepts of internet communications in breach of the u.s. constitution. the nsa also collected as much as 56,000 e-mailed communications while it was trying to track foreign terrorists. the court criticized the agency for misrepresenting the scale of its spying practices. judge john bates wrote, quote, this court is troubled that the government's revelations marks the third instance in less than three years in which the government has disclosed a substantial misrepresentation regarding the scope of a major collection program, end quote. nsa officials said the agency's activities were lawful and any mistakes were largely unintentional. >>> talk about some material. more tapes from the height of the water gate scandal have been released. pete williams has more on the newly released tapes including a phone call from a su
. >>> the nsa is under fire yet again. newly released government documents show the secretive court that oversees surveillance programs sharply rebuked the nsa back in 2011. the charge? the nsa was searching the kepts of internet communications in breach of the u.s. constitution. the nsa also collected as much as 56,000 e-mailed communications while it was trying to track foreign terrorists. the court criticized the agency for misrepresenting the scale of its spying practices. judge...